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V. MYSTERY, MIRACLE, and MORALITY plays

“MYSTERY”
  • 18th CENTURY:
  • distinction between "mystery" (Biblical history) & "miracle" (lives & legends of saints)
  • during Middle Ages:
  • "miracle" = ANY medieval play
  • derived from "miraculum":
  • not limited to supernatural invention in human lives;
  • meant anything of a religious character
  • in FRANCE:
  • "mystery" = Biblical play
  • French "mystere" =
  • not Greek "mysterion" (secret religious ceremonies)
  • not English "mystery" (trade or craft guild)
  • but Latin "ministerium" (referring to Church service)
  • the spiritual “mystery” of Christ’s redemption of humanity
  • Latin mysterium (“handicraft”) related to guilds (guilds = “mysteries”)
  • mysteres” of France, “sacre rappresentazioni” of Italy, “autos sacramentales” in Spain, “Geistspiele” of German-speaking lands
(1) mystery play = Biblical story (usually Gospels)
(2) miracle play = hagiography
(3) morality play = conflict of personified abstractions, not Biblical or hagiographical, but creative stories that "sermonize" on moral, ethical behavior with regard to salvation

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(1) MYSTERY CYCLES:

  • TRAITS:
  • "Mystery Cycles," "Biblical Pageants," "Cyclical Pageants," "Corpus Christi Plays," "Corpus Christi Pageants"
  • "pageant" = usually denotes a PART of a cycle, one play within a complete cycle collection
  • performances: parade-like from dawn to dusk in a single day OR over 2 or 3 successive days (local custom)
  • *from European Continent tradition:
  • especially New Testament material
  • “Passion Plays”
  • survive today in Oberammergau (southern Bavaria town)
  • events from the Bible
  • not dogmatic (as “morality plays”)
  • celebrated the “good news” of salvation
  • cycles of plays that were presented on the feast of Corpus Christi in large towns like York & Coventry (church & guilds)
  • GOD = speaking character (“Deus”)
  • pageants = poetic drama
  • 8-line stanzas (10, 11, 12-line stanzas)
  • alliteration (see Anglo-Saxon literature)
  • rhyme scheme (abab, cddc) (abab, cccc)
  • no scene divisions
  • anachronisms:
  • references to Christ
  • Cain swears to Christ
  • “hob” = prankster from Yorkshire folklore
  • “Wat Wink” (Noah) and other comic, derogatory nicknames
  • bailiffs

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  • TIME FRAME:
  • height: late 14thC, early 15thC
  • decline: end of 15thC
  • cost-prohibitive for guilds
  • move from amateur to professional drama (touring of semi- or professional troupes)
  • Protestant pressure (representations of Christ & Virgin Mother = sacrilegious)
  • *Miracle Plays = still performed into 16thC (at Coventry, 14 miles from Stratford)
  • *Morality Plays = most important plays of late 15thC, early 16thC

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  • CHANGES:
  • secular authorities
  • trade guilds & amateur actors (Bottom in MSND)
  • religious content = not necessary
  • COMEDY:**
  • addition of farcical characters or episodes (mix of secular folk entertainment with religious)
  • still respectful & reverent with divine characters
  • but burlesqued villains (Satan, Pilate, Herod, Cain), non-biblical characters (servants, soldiers, shepherds—medieval, clowned & joked)
  • merchants in the “3 Marys”;
  • shepherds in the Christmas plays;
  • “Mak the Sheepstealer;”
  • Noah’s shrewish wife;
  • Babel’s workmen;
  • *SATAN* and his devils
  • masked, acrobatic dancing & farcical miming–interludes
  • vernacular
  • extravagance:
  • realism (bloody executions);
  • complicated plots;
  • props; working machinery (cranes, trap doors, HELL MOUTH);
  • elaborate costumes (leather, jewelry, gilded halos & masks);
  • instrumental or vocal music…
  • DIRECTOR
  •  semi-professional actors (as parts became more complex)
  •  national theater companies

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  • CYCLES:
  • “cycle plays,” “Corpus Christi plays,” “pageant plays”
  • *no ORIGINAL of a cycle exists
  • *extant = transcripts, with revisions & inter-borrowings
  • annual spring performance (starting at daybreak) (end of May, early June)
  • performed on Whitsunday: (aka Pentecost)
  • “50th day” after Easter; 7th Sunday after Easter; reception of Holy Spirit
  • or performed Corpus Christi Day:
  • Thursday after Trinity Sunday (@ 7 weeks after Easter); celebrates doctrine of transubstantiation
  • 1264, Pope Urban IV, 1311, Pope Clement V (established holy day)
  • English weather: Easter-time weather was unpredictable  moved to late May, early June
  • story of cycles = PROLEPTIC HISTORY of HUMANITY**
  • from before & after mankind
  • from Creation to Last Judgment
  • God's plan for humanity
  • from the Gospels, with some OT characters/stories
  • fall of Lucifer, Creation, fall of Adam, Noah, Cain & Abel, Abraham & Isaac, Nativity scenes, Annunciation with Joseph's troubled response, episodes from Christ's life, Christ's Passion & Resurrection (with "Quem Quaeritis" in between), Judgment Day ("Judicium")
  • dramatized Biblical history:
  • from Creation to Last Judgment
  • *Medieval Cycles broke Classical UNITIES: (time, place, action)
  • Greek & Roman drama: a short period, day or less
  • Medieval & Elizabethan drama: whole history: Creation to Judgment, kings to beggars, sorrow & joy (dramatization of the Christian view of life)
  • range in time & space & character
  • some of the cycles-subjects =

1) Lucifer’s fall / 1) Harrowing of Hell
2) Creation & Adam’s fall / 2) Loaves & Fishes
3) Cain & Abel / 3) Slaughter of the Innocents
4) Noah & the Flood / 4) Moses
5) Abraham & Isaac / 5) Prophets
6) Nativity / 6) John the Baptist, Jesus’ Baptism
7) Lazarus / 7) Jesus’ Temptation in the Wilderness
8) Passion & Resurrection / 8) Assumption & Coronation of the Virgin
9) Judgment-Doomsday Day
  • guild=pageant:
  • correlation between a guild & its play-part
  • best for props & scenery & costuming
  • see YORK CYCLE (below)

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  • shipwrights = Noah & Flood
  • bakers = Last Supper
  • vintners = Miracle at Cana
  • goldsmiths= Magi
  • carpenters = Resurrection
  • butchers = Crucifixion

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  • 4 extant cycles:
1) York (48)2) Wakefield (30-32)
3) Chester (25) 4) N-Town (42)

(1) WAKEFIELD CYCLE:

  • younger than the York Cycle
  • aka, "Towneley Cycle" because it was in the possession of this Lancashire family
  • presented by Wakefield craft & trade guilds
  • 30 plays ("pageants")
  • not all = complete
  • 5/6 attributed to an unidentified (unidentifiable) single author "the Wakefield Master" based on stanza forms, local allusions, individuality of style & idiom
  • Second Shepherd’s Play
  • performed in procession
  • from dawn to dusk

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(2) YORK CYCLE:

  • dated from 1340-50 (older than Wakefield Cycle)
  • performed processionally (parade)
  • from dawn (4:30-5 AM) to dusk
  • 4x Hamlet in length, @ 15 hours

  • 1. Creation, Fall of Lucifer (Tanners),
/
  • 2. Creation (days 1-5, Plasterers),

  • 3. Creation and A&E (cardmakers),
/
  • 4. A&E in Eden (Fullers),

  • Fall of Man (coopers),
/
  • Expulsion (armorers),

  • Cain & Abel (glovers),
/
  • Building of Ark (shipwrights),

  • Noah & wife (fishers & mariners),
/
  • Abraham & Isaac (parchmenters, bookbinders),

  • Israelites from Egypt & 10 plagues & Red Sea (hosiers),
/
  • Annunciation & Visitation (spicers),

  • Joseph's troubles (pewterers, founders),
/
  • Journey to Bethlehem & Jesus' birth (tile-thatchers),

  • shepherds (chandlers/candlemakers),
/
  • Going of the 3 kings to Herod (masons),

  • Coming of the Kings & Adoration (goldsmiths),
/
  • flight to Egypt (marshals/horse-groomers),

  • Slaughter of the Innocents (girdlers & nailers),
/
  • Christ with the Doctors (spurriers & lorimers/spur & bit-makers),

  • Baptism of Jesus (barbers),
/
  • Temptation (smiths),

  • Transfiguration (curriers/leather-dressers),
/
  • Woman taken in adultery & Lazarus (capmakers),

  • Christ's entrance to Jerusalem (skinners),
/
  • Conspiracy (cutlers),

  • Last Supper (bakers),
/
  • Agony & Betrayal (cordwainers),

  • Peter's Denial & Jesus before Caiaphas (bowyers & fletchers),
/
  • Dream of Pilate's wife & Jesus before Pilate (tapiters/tapestry & carpet-makers and couchers),

  • Trial before Herod (litsters/dyers),
/
  • 2nd Accusation before Pilate & Remorse of Judas & Purchase of Field of Blood (cooks & leaders),

  • 2nd trial before Pilate (tilemakers),
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  • Christ led to Calvary (shearmen),

  • Crucifixion (pinners & painters),
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  • Mortification of Christ & Burial (butchers),

  • Harrowing of Hell (saddlers),
/
  • Resurrection (carpenters),

  • Christ's appearance to Mary Magdalene (winedrawers),
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  • Travelers to Emmaus (sledmen),

  • Purification of Mary & Simeon and Anna (hatmakers & masons & laborers),
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  • Incredulity of Thomas (scriveners),

  • Ascension (tailors),
/
  • Descent of the Holy Spirit (potters),

  • Death of Mary (drapers/dealers of dry goods),
/
  • Appearance of Mary to Thomas (weavers),

  • Assumption and Coronation of the Virgin (ostlers/stablemen),
/
  • Judgment Day (mercers/textile-dealers)

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(3) N-TOWN CYCLE:

  • manuscript dated from late 15thC
  • 42 plays ("pageants")
  • aka, Hegge Cycle: Robert Hegge may have owned them
  • once called the "Coventry Cycle" (but not from Coventry)
  • likely from eastern counties
  • "N-Towne" from one of the plays' prologue (not a name, but a blank line to be filled in by the traveling players)
  • *performed on stationary platforms (late 15thC)
  • didactic, least dramatic of the cycles (late 15thC)

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(4) CHESTER CYCLE:

*oldest plays (although no extant manuscript older than 1591, perhaps originated in mid 14thC)

  • 25 plays ("pageants")
  • *appear to be the 1st performed on Feast of Corpus Christi, 7/8 weeks after Easter -- after 1264 Pope Urban (instituted the feast in honor of the Holy Sacrament), 1311 Pope Clement V (solidified feast)
  • reserved humor, high religious tone, les obtrusive didacticism

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*PRODUCTION:

  • in meadows, public greens, highways, streets, markets
  • in market towns & cathedral towns
  • produced by religious fraternities, municipal corporations, trade & craft guilds
  • cooperation = economics & religion
  • (trade guilds not = trade unions: managers of TG = also workmen)
  • move from the clergy to the laity
  • from Latin to English vernacular*
  • from strictly religious to introduction of more secular/worldly elements (comedy & farce parts--but kept primary reverence)

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*STAGING:

1) ambulatory-perambulating:

  • processional, parade-like
  • repeat scene-pageant at each stopping point along the “parade” route
  • audience: heterogeneous crowd (princes, nobles, churchmen, commoners,serfs)
  • preferred by guild cycles
  • more common method of production
  • audience remained stationary (play brought to them)
  • a production "seriatim"
  • the destiny of mankind performed linearly
  • performed on pageant wagons, "floats"
  • wagons = (“pageants”)
  • horse-drawn floats (like those used in triumphal entries or royal processions)
  • high scaffold with 2 tiers;
  • curtained lower room for dressing ("tiring room"),
  • higher room for performing (greater visibility)
  • around wagons = stage-ground, too (Herod, devils, demons)
  • Archdeacon Rogers describes procession & wagons in his account of Chester Cycle (late 16thC)

2) stationary-static:

  • (2) theater-in-the-round:
  • raised amphitheater; an arena w/ multiple stages
  • stage = “platea”: perimeter of a central plain; “tenti” raised scaffolds on perimeter; seats = inward side of a mound
  • created in a meadow with a ditch, wall, fence enclosure
  • (3) houses (“mansions”) in semi-circle, straight line, OR amphitheater setting (theater-in-the-round) – on a long elevated platform (France’s Passion plays)
  • action moved from house to house as the play progressed
  • France: “mansions” (scenes) representing different locales from Heaven to Hell
  • *heaven is STILL on the actor’s right, hell on the left (as in church)

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*SCENERY & COSTUMES:

  • some attempt towards realism, "production"
  • smoke, fireworks, banging of pots & pans & kettles
  • devil costumes = full suit, leather, tails, hooves, horns, masks, pitch fork
  • God in white leather, white hair & beard
  • A&E curtained or in white leather (nudity)
  • Eden strewn with flowers & fruits
  • linen as clouds
  • *COLOR SYMBOLISM:
  • from Church liturgy
  • in Castle of Perseverance (& others)
  • white = mercy
  • red = righteousness
  • green = truth
  • black = evil